Trees & Graphs Chapter 25 Carrano, Data Structures and Abstractions with Java, Second Edition, (c) 2007 Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. 0-13-237045-X.

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Trees & Graphs Chapter 25 Carrano, Data Structures and Abstractions with Java, Second Edition, (c) 2007 Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. 0-13-237045-X

Chapter Contents Tree Concepts Traversals of a Tree Hierarchical Organizations Tree Terminology Traversals of a Tree Traversals of a Binary Tree Traversals of a General Tree Java Interfaces for Trees Interfaces for All Trees An Interface for Binary Trees

Chapter Contents Examples of Binary Trees Examples of General Trees Expression Trees Decision Trees Binary Search Trees Heaps Examples of General Trees Parse Trees Game Trees

Tree Concepts Previous data organizations place data in linear order Some data organizations require categorizing data into groups, subgroups This is hierarchical classification Data items appear at various levels within the organization

Hierarchical Organization Example: Family trees Fig. 25-1 Carole's children and grandchildren.

Hierarchical Organization Example: Family trees Fig. 25-2 Jared's parents and grandparents.

Hierarchical Organization Example: A university's organization Fig. 25-3 A university's administrative structure.

Hierarchical Organization Example: File Directories Fig. 25-4 Computer files organized into folders

Tree Terminology A tree is A set of nodes Connected by edges The edges indicate relationships among nodes Nodes arranged in levels Indicate the nodes' hierarchy Top level is a single node called the root

Tree Terminology Fig. 25-5 A tree equivalent to the tree in Fig. 25-4

Tree Terminology Nodes at a given level are children of nodes of previous level Node with children is the parent node of those children Nodes with same parent are siblings Node with no children is a leaf node The only node with no parent is the root node All others have one parent each

Tree Terminology Empty trees? Some authors specify a general tree must have at least the root node This text will allow all trees to be empty A node is reached from the root by a path The length of the path is the number of edges that compose it The height of a tree is the number of levels in the tree The subtree of a node is a tree rooted at a child of that node

Binary Trees Each node has at most two children Fig. 25-6 Three binary trees.

Binary Trees A binary tree is either empty or has the following form Where Tleft and Tright are binary trees

Binary Trees Every nonleaf in a full binary tree has exactly two children A complete binary tree is full to its next-to-last level Leaves on last level filled from left to right The height of a binary tree with n nodes that is either complete or full is log2(n + 1)

Full Tree Height Number of Nodes Binary Trees Fig. 25-7 The number of nodes in a full binary tree as a function of the tree's height.

Binary Trees Full Tree Height Number of Nodes Fig. 25-7 The number of nodes in a full binary tree as a function of the tree's height.

Traversals of a Tree Visiting a node Processing the data within a node This is the action performed on each node during traversal of a tree A traversal can pass through a node without visiting it at that moment For a binary tree Visit the root Visit all nodes in the root's left subtree Visit all nodes in the root's right subtree

Traversals of a Tree Preorder traversal: visit root before the subtrees Fig. 25-8 The visitation order of a preorder traversal.

Traversals of a Tree Inorder traversal: visit root between visiting the subtrees Fig. 25-9 The visitation order of an inorder traversal.

Traversals of a Tree Postorder traversal: visit root after visiting the subtrees These are examples of a depth-first traversal. Fig. 25-10 The visitation order of a postorder traversal.

Traversals of a Tree Level-order traversal: begin at the root, visit nodes one level at a time This is an example of a breadth-first traversal. Fig. 25-11 The visitation order of a level-order traversal.

Traversals of a General Tree A general tree has traversals that are in Level order Preorder Postorder Inorder traversal not well defined for a general tree

Traversals of a General Tree Fig. 25-12 The visitation order of two traversals of a general tree: (a) preorder.

Traversals of a General Tree Fig. 25-12 The visitation order of two traversals of a general tree: (b) postorder.

Java Interfaces for Trees An interface that specifies operations common to all trees

Java Interfaces for Trees Interface of traversal methods for a tree

Java Interfaces for Trees View interface for a class of binary trees Fig. 25-13 A binary tree whose nodes contain one-letter strings

interfaces for a Binary Tree Package TreePackage Public interface BinaryTreeInterface<T> extends TreeInterface<T>, TreeIteratorInterface<T> { // a new one-node binary tree public void setTree(T rootData); //a new binary tree public void setTree(T rootData, BinaryTreeInterface<T> leftTree, BinaryTreeInterface<T> rightTree); }

Examples of Binary Trees Expression Trees Click to view algorithm for evaluating an expression tree Fig. 25-14 Expression trees for four algebraic expressions.

Decision Trees A decision tree can be the basis of an expert system Helps users solve problems, make decisions Fig. 25-15 A portion of a binary decision tree.

Decision Trees View source code of interface for a binary decision tree Example: a guessing game Fig. 25-16 An initial decision tree for a guessing game.

Decision Trees Click to view the class GuessingGame Fig. 25-17 The decision tree for a guessing game after acquiring another fact.

Binary Search Trees A search tree organizes its data so that a search is more efficient Binary search tree Nodes contain Comparable objects A node's data is greater than the data in the node's left subtree A node's data is less than the data in the node's right subtree

Binary Search Trees Fig. 25-18 A binary search tree of names.

Binary Search Trees Click to view algorithm for searching a binary tree Fig. 25-19 Two binary search trees containing the same names as the tree in Fig. 25-18

Heaps A complete binary tree Maxheap Minheap Nodes contain Comparable objects Each node contains no smaller (or no larger) than objects in its descendants Maxheap Object in a node is ≥ its descendant objects Minheap Object in a node is ≤ descendant objects

Heaps Fig. 25-20 (a) A maxheap and (b) a minheap that contain the same values

Heaps View interface for a maxheap Note method for removing the root (the maximum value in the tree) Heap can be used to implement ADT priority queue View the beginnings of the class PriorityQueue

Examples of General Trees Fig. 25-21 A parse tree for the algebraic expression a * (b + c)

Examples of General Trees Fig. 25-22 A portion of a game tree for tic-tac-toe